The Haileyburian (1912-1957), 8 Aug 1929, p. 5

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sc THURSDAY, AUGUST 8th, 1929 THE HAILEYBURIAN No Casualties When Cutter Rams Liner The coast liner Prince George is shown above limping into port at Boston after her ctash fifty-five miles off shore in the early morning fog with the coastguard patrol boat Agassiz. Below are seen some of the 249 passengers who were rescued and safely ferried in small boats to the Agassiz and the cutter Mojave. The Agassiz is shown at right, with stove-in bow, at the Charleston Navy Yard, after the collision. This casket bears the remains of Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, late President of the Nationalist Party of China, who died four years ago, as it was brought up the steps of the new mausoleum at Peking, and laid to rest with solemn ceremony. Pictorial and Cartoon Page for Readers of The Haileyburian | eeee eee coos Famous French General Tours Continent Helps Canada to Victory oe i & i ¢ Lieut. Desmond Burke, of Otta- wa, famous Canadian rifleman, who was a member of the Cana- dian team which won the coveted Kolapore Cup, and tied with Col. Blair, of Vancouver, only to lose in the shoot-off for King's Prize. Made a Baron a General Henry Joseph E. Gouraud, Military Governor of Paris, one of France's war heroes, who was nethusiastically greeted on his arrival at New York to be a guest of the Rainbow Division of the United States army, which saw service under the command of the one-armed French General. George: "Do you believe in clubs for women?" Baden-Powell, organizer and lea- : > 9 } der of the Boy Scout movement Earl: "Yes, if kindness fails. throughout the world, who has been made a baron by His Majes- ty on the occasion of the celebra- tion of the twenty-first anniver- sary of the Boy Scout movement May Head Grain Board The Humorist, London Portuguese Claims Countryman Found America Duncan A. McGibbon, Professor A of Economics at the University a= oT The trmendous interest of men and women today in art in all its forms has caused a well known pro- fessor on psychology to make the statement that the present so-called "modern art" appeals to the masses because it is of them and for them. Above are some examples: Left, "Adolescent," sculpture by Sava Boxtaris, young Servo-Greek artist, showing trend of modern art. Above, centre, a striking black and white conception of an economic phase in. the life of Russia today, drawn by Slavic artist. Inset, Prof. Marston, lecturer on psychology at Columbia University, who 'has made remarkable dis- coveries about the Jatest "freak art." Right.is the artist Boxtaris, with another of his modern works "Portrait of Ernest Thesiger," a noted British actor. of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, > i si whose name has been mentioned in connection with the vacancy in the chairmanship of the Domin- ion'Grain Board. The position was formerly held by Leslie Boyd, K.C. The Portuguese Consul, A. de Oliviera Aguas, top, right, advances an interesting argument that Corte-Real actually discovered Am- erica nineteen years before Columbus Janded here ,though Achille G. Vervena, left, student of maritime history in New York, refuses to be convinced of this. Below is an ancient map, showing a por- tion of the globe, as charted in 1492, by Martin Behaim, and shows the erroneous designation of the New World as "India."

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